We study the population of compact star clusters (CSCs) in M81, using the Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) images in the filters F435W, F606W and F814W covering, for the first time, the entire optical extent of the galaxy. Our sample contains 435 clusters of full width at half-maximum less than 10 ACS pixels (9 pc). The sample shows the presence of two cluster populations, a blue group of 263 objects brighter than B = 22 mag, and a red group of 172 objects, brighter than B = 24 mag. On the basis of analysis of colour-magnitude diagrams and making use of simple stellar population models, we find the blue clusters are younger than 300 Myr with some clusters as young as few Myr, and the red clusters are as old as globular clusters (GCs). The luminosity function of the blue group follows a power-law distribution with an index of 2.0, typical value for young CSCs in other galaxies. The power law shows unmistakable signs of truncation at I = 18.0mag (MI = -9.8mag), which would correspond to a mass limit of 4 × 104M if the brightest clusters are younger than 10 Myr. The red clusters have photometric masses between 105 and 2 × 107M for the adopted age of 5 Gyr and their luminosity function resembles very much the GC luminosity function in the MilkyWay. The brightest GC in M81 hasM0B = -10.3mag, which is ~0.9 mag brighter than ω Cen, the most massive GC in the Milky Way.
CITATION STYLE
Santiago-Cortés, M., Mayya, Y. D., & Rosa-González, D. (2010). Wide-field HST/ACS images of M81: The population of compact star clusters. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 405(2), 1293–1302. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2010.16531.x
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.